2211:010 TOWANDA: ..---... •-•••••• x SalutbaP elornin 9 . %Ord 9. MO. ,icktt6 Vottti. CHILD'S EVENINO PRAYER. Jags. Heavenly Shepherd. hear me, Pess thy little lamb to night, th ro ugh the darkness be than near me, Watch my sleep till morning light. All this day thy hands has led me} Ard I thank Thee for thy care. Ilea bast warmed and clothed and fed me . Listento my craning prayer. Hay my sins be all forgiven, Bless the friends I love so well glen I die, take me to Heaven. Happy there with Thee to dwell tlttt gale. (Firm the \e.. York Evening Post.) TIIE UIRLIVIND• PT WILLIAM CULLBN BRTANT. Wars I last visited the country beyond the Alle- I travelled from %Meeting to Lexington on in order to contemplate more at my lei te beautiful scenery of that interesting region. way I fell in with a person also on horse going in the same direction, who seemed in• 'd to join company with me, an arrangement to th, as 1 had already travelled a considerable alone, I felt no particular aversion. He ipparently about fort•-five years of age, of a athletic make, and a sallow, almost a swar complexion. His eyes were of a dull hazel clay deep in their sockets, and were surrounded ~ales of a darker tinge than the rest of his late. them a pair of low, horizontal, coal-black 'Tows, gave an inexpressibly hard and ascetic his coortenance. He wore a black bombs• coot, the tight sleeves of which set oil to great lone his lean arms, the large joints of his el is, his big wrists, and the heavy hands with th he grasped hie beechen switch and the reins as bridle. The remainder of his apparel con of a well saved hat, in 'that state ot respecta rosiness in which that article is kepi by decent , :e who db not of en indulge themselves in the bt a new one, pepper and salt-colored sari antaloons, over which were drawn a pair of ctaored bco's, a black silk waistcoat, and a tty white cravat, the - sharp spear-like ends of :th projected in different diregtions• from under 4-roa - n throat. He bestrode a tall, strong-limb• lean, black horse ; across the saddle hung a ponmantean, and from under the pom il peeped a bit of sheep-skin dressed with the o 3 placed there to prevent the animal's back teing dialed with the. journey. le renamed a civil answer to my salutation, with Li and prolonged enunciation of the vowel is. and a melancholy quaver 01 the voice.— :xles, however, were full, mellow, and evl ly rated. If I had pre% iously any doubt of %canon, it was now removed ; and I instantly tint down for an Itinerant preacher of the Bap• or Nlethoeist persuasion. Adapting my con- to his supposed profession, I inquired of tir.e slate of religion in those parts. On this he was abundantly eloquent, and I soon that he was a Baptist preacher who had been :-.lart visit to the neighbor:vod of Wheeling. sas now on his way to some of the villages . et Lexington on the west batik of the Kentucky lo?iform beside the translucent streams and let the venerable trees of that fine region, those iresquetisolemnities of his sect, to which they me to point as a manifold emblem of purification moral pi:glutton, and of the resurrection from te death of sin and the sleep oh the grave. He told :es chequered history of religions avrakenins in me Ekes, hunt:reds gathered into the fold, end ciadslaiings and indifference in others. lies-was the conversation passed to other sub- P's 1 scold not help speaking of the exceeding se of the vegetation in that country, a* com- Teed ea that of the Atlantic coast. Tes,'• replied my companion, " the land is a of milk and honey, and the clouds drop fatness I :2z r trygronh) and sinful as we are, who make it abluing place God maketh his sun to shine m.. 2 evil and nr.tha:.klul, and sentleth rain on the Asd o.e unjust. But are you from the Atlantic Jaen " I am." "from New England inquired he, opeakir g tore crackly than he had done before, and with tneihiftg, on hlscoomenanee more like a smile than 1 tad stet ham wear. 1- No, from New York." eson'eaare rela i nge t l spin into its former C'' 1 " 11- 'Y " 1," said be, " am from Ntlr England ".Sour friend s ptohnbly lire in that part of the raii3 1 , availing myself of that freedom of 4.e - rogat ion of winch he had set . me the example 4 Friends, if you will," answered be, =t I may 431 Ltd, but relations none. There lives not in ":" Je 'Cued Cates, though they are my native "t"nr, a single human being with whom I am cr.= km.hed. God has cut away, by a- terrible, ' X: 33 believe, a mercifoldispensstioft: ties of an earthly nature that bound me to e 7 fellow oreamres! the members of the - Church and they only, are now my lathers and zzlers, and sisters and brethren." illude, I perceive," said to some re %titbit event ofyour life. May . I take the fiber lf ainviring what !" ic ue!"f," heweds " it gave me great pain l ielk of but I have related bonen, and itdoes I ' l° I. llel ; sucl, - moreover, i nip COOTineed that fial on my pan to wish to normal the deal ';) of God's providence with me from Maim who 'az; to hear what they have been." . : --' " . . . , . • F. , "•' . .-% •:- 4:'-cr , T.5.;,.. tt_ . ,ll„. ';' , -", -- e.':,•61 . --...., • . : - .I • :7-r , v..- s': 1. :.,.., , ;;; ' :..,...'y . '-' - R--- , . .. ... . , J ., , .. . .. ... . s. . 8.. . : _ I „. , ...:::: : ..,:,... , .„........ .:.. _..... 2„...,,„:„.,,:..,...,..,.....„._..-_,:„:„-. _. ......,....z....„.., ...„ :,. . , . . .._‘.. 7 „.,.,.„ . ._...,.„._ ..,„ , ......._.,.......,.... I . ~_ ~. .... ... ....... .... ..... ~..... . .. _ g' You must know; thert,lhat tity father was a na tive of the island of Nantucket, and the only son of an emigmnt.pair from. St. John's, on the coast of Newfoundland.. My mother was from 'Wales, She was tut a child when her father took passage lot this country, with her and two brothers older than herself. Thebessel in which they came was wrecked off Cape Cod, and all on board perished except my mother and four of the crew; who .were picked up by the fitthermen of Hyannis. She was received into one of the most wealthy families on the Cape, and was brought up by the good people WI it she had been one of their own children. " My fathei had been a seafaring man in early life, and had risen to the command of a merchant vessel. At the age of thirty-five he became ac quainted with m 5 mother, who was some fifteen years younger than himself, and made her , propo sals of marriage, which she would accept only on condition that he should quit the sea, which had been the grave of her family. He made the prom ise she required, they were married, and removed to th 3 interior, where my father botighi a farm, and settled as an agriculturist. " Our tesidence was on the highlands west of the Connecticut river: There was a liule decayed old dwelling on the farm when my father came to live there ; he caused it to be polled clown, and had a neat white cottage on the spot : In this cot tage was I born, and hero I passed the earliest years of my lite, and, speaking with respect to temporal comforts and enjoyments, the happiest It was a lovely spot, lovely then, but now no longer so—it is bare and desolate=the besom of destruction has swept it—the winds, God's ministers, were sent azainst it, to raze its walls, and root up its shades, and slay its inmates. I sometimes think that the distinctness with which that abode of my youth. and its dear inhabi tants rise before my imagination is a device of the enemy to tempt me, and to shake my resignation to the decrees of the Almighty. A young orchard sheltered the cottage on the north west, and back of the orchard rose a wooden hid. On - the south side of the Mou=e was our garden, which bordered on a clear prattling brook. To the east were rich meadows and fields of grain. and pastures where gathered strawberries and looked for birds' nests all sloping away gently for a considerable distance, after which they sunk down out of sight into the deep glen of a river, whose shallow murmurs were often heard by us as we sat under the wild cherry trees before our door. To the east of the river spread a wide tract of count's-, in full sight from our windows—farm houses, painted red and white. with their orchards and corn-fields and woodlands ; steeples of distant chUrches, and a blue horizon of woods bounding the scene. " Time went by pleasantly until my tenth year. Childhood is the only season of life in which hap py years do not pass away swiftly. They glide softly, but they do not fly, and they seem as long as they are full of enilyment I had an elder sister, Jane, just attired at seventeen : a fall sirailit, blooming girl, who had been my instructress in all childish pastimes. She taught me where to find the earliest blossoms and the sweetest Berrie., and showed me where the beech shed its nuts thickest when it felt the October frosts, and led me beside wild streams in the woods, and read acidly books with me, and taught me to sing getiiri hymns on Sundays under tue trees of our orchard. There were two brothers, :wine, five years younger than myself, to whom I now performed the same cffice, aid beautiful creatures they were, it I can trust my memory, as ever were sent into the world to be re called in the bud of life ; fair, round-faced, good humoured, toilet a perpetual flow of spirits, and in look, gesture and disposition, the exact copies at each other. And as they were alike in birth and mind, and outward semblance, so they were alike in their Hies, and in their deaths not. divided. I PUBLISHED :EVERY SATURD4Y AT TOtAnA., ,BRADFORMCOUNTY - i-11, BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. was their constant companion, and sometimes our sister, 'who had now grown to maturity, would leave her sedate occupations and join in all our 012 " My mother was of a delicate frame, and a qui et and somewhat sad turn of mind. The calamity by which her family had perished made a diep impression upon her, and disposed her heart to re ligious afiections. Her eyes would some:imes fill with tears, as she looked at ns in the midst of our pastime& and she would often mildly check our boisterous mirth. She was our catechist, she made ns read our Bible ; and taught us oar lisle hymns and prayers. " My lather was, o was tho'ighl, an unregener ate person, but he was what the world calls a good moral man, and much respected by his neighbors He was of an even, quiet tenaper, never greatly ex hilerated by good nor greatly' depressed by bad tot. lane. Ido not recollect ever seeing him apparent ly better pleased than when:his cl•ildren were nois est in their play, when he would sit looking at us with great complacency, and tell our mother how he was like us at our age_ He was what is taileda silent man, he said but little, and, indulgent as be wag, that little was a law loos. The neighbor good also treated him with great deference ; his opinion was consulted in all difficult cases ;le was mule town clerk, and then sent a representative to the General Cowt, and finally received a commis sion of the peace. " My father,' as f have already toil you, was originally a seafaring man, and his profession had made him familiar with alt the appearances - of the heavens. To his knowledge of this kind, acquired on the ocean and the coast of the Atlantic, he now Added that gained by a daily observation of 1$ as pect of the heavens in the interior;"anal he be came celebrated in those parts for his akin dis cerniuglhe hie ol the sky. • He laminated upon as a son of Grade 'on the subject of the imbiber, .and his redietions were nsierenei4 even mote thanAhoseetthe almanac— -It was am always that an %glair* ere:ditto extracted front him ; bet when obtained, iit never faded of being . veii6ed. His bay never got lief 'while lying green on its ground, nor de I believe that he was ever overtaken by a - - " REGARDLESS. Or DENUNCIATION PROM ANT QUARTER." shOw.eilti . any" Of his ecorsions froni home. He would pass half hours, iri"gaing . at the sky, and watching the courses of the clouds. An observa tion of the weather was his' first business in the morning, and his last at night ; and if the manly placidity of his temper was ever on atti occasion disturbed, it was only when the weather was more capricious than ordinary ; when it refused to con form to fixed rules, and failed to fulfil tLe promise it held forth. In this f think he was wrong, as questioning the Providence of God s exerted in the great courses of nature; but who is without his er rors ? ' The country in which we lived was high and hilly. The streams by which it was intersected, flowed in deep, narrow glens, unpleasant from their chilliness, shade, and mists at morning and even ing ; and the farms and dwellings lay on the broad elevated country between them. Thus an ample sweep was aflorded for the winds, which blew over the country with as little obstruction as on the summits of mountains. The snow was often piled in the winter to the roofs of the houses, and you might see orchards in which every tree leaned to the south west, bent and made to grew in that po sition by the strong and continued gales. "In the fast year of my residet.ce in this pleas. ant abode, we had, about the setting in of the Sum mer, several weeks of in.corn mon heat and drought. God sealed up the fountains of the firmament, and made the heavens over our heads brass, and the earth under our feet ashes Clouds floated over the fiery sky, and brought no rain; the atmosphere was filled with a dull dry haze as if the finer dust of the ground had raised and mingled with it. Out of this haze the sun emerged at morning, and again dipped into it at evening, hiding his face long be fore he reached the horizon. The grass of the field ceased to grow, and became thin and whee and dry before it ripened, and hissed mournfully when'. ever a breath of air passed over it. The birds chirp. ed feebly in the trees; the cattle lowed fauidy the meadows, and gathered about the moister vote of soil. All this white the wind scarce blew, o u r but sofly, or with strengdi enough to detach from the cherry trees before our door the loose leaves that put on the yellowness of Sep'ember, and dropped of their own accord, one by one, spinning round as they descended to the earth. I had never known my lather so uneasy and fidge'y as at that period He would stand for hours considering the aspect t f the heavens, and even af er the twilight was down, he was out by the door, gazing at that hazy canopy through which the stars dimly trembled Jly moth er, in the meastime, called her children about her, and taught us a prayer for rain. " At length came a day of more per ec catni and stillness titan we had experienced, even hi that season of calms. The leaves orr, the trees were so motionless, that you almost snlght have fancied them wrought of metal to mock the growth of the vegetable would. ' I remember 'feeling uneasy at the depth and corninuance el the. silence, broke', only by the gurgle at the brook at the bottom of the garden, where a slender thread of heated water r. to crept along. the sound of which fed on my ear with a pai:,fid dis..inctaess. There was tra not a speck, nothing but that thick whitish haze, to be seen in all the sky. My father went often through the day, and stood anxiously lookrng at the atmosphere, while I silently crept neanehina with my two little brothers. There was something in his manner that male us afraid, though of bat we knew not. My mother, too, appeared sadder than usual. Once when my fattier returned into ;he house, he told her that this was just such wea ther as had preceded the water-spout that over whelmed the fishing botzt oil the coast of Cape Cod thirty years before, and drowned all on board. " I fear . greatly," said he," that some mischief is brewing for us or our neighbors ; but I hripe, at least, that it will steer clear of all our houses." " The night at length arrived, and no evil bad as yet come nigh us or our dwellings. My mother 53W us all in our beds, and made us say our pray ers, and bade us good night, in that mild, and af fectionate voice, which I shall never feget ; bu: for my part I could tart sleep, agitated, as I was with the vague and awful apprehensions with which my father's looks and wont", and the strange appear ances of nature, had filled my mind, and which were struggling to clothe themselves with images Sleep at length fell upon me, a deep sleep, and with it brought the visions of the night, I imagined that the profeund sifence was suddenly broken with strange and terrible crashihge, and masses of earth and portions of the sky were mingling ar.d and rolling, over each other. I awoke with my limbs bathed in sweat, and it was long before my tear would allow me to more them When die usual current of my sensations was restored,. I was comforted to find myself still in niy own familiar couch, though in the midst of utter darkness, and that awful lifeless eileuce, so deep that I could hear the clicking of my father's watch .in the next room. Tne sun.rose as usual the next day, and the same calm and„silence continued. My owmappre hensions had passed away with the night, though I o b served my father watching the cloudless hazy skies with the same eye:ot.anxicy About twelve o'clock I was in the orchard back of our conaze, amusing myself with gathering the largest of the unripe apples which the drought had caused to drop in great numbers from the trees, intending to carry them to my two- little brothers-to play. With. My father had left his occupations in ,the 'field on de count of the beat, and was•then in the house. Sud denly [heard a cackfingsomad in the southwest, as of a' mighty flame running among brushwood, and Mona into fury by wrong wind: Looking towards that quarter, I beheld *small dark cloud, enlarging, blacking, and advancing every insant, and under it the wood agitated with violent motion, the treetops .wireirm and tataing,the trunlawrin' g ing to and fro, as if wrestling with a tmitats gust— Blab wan flying in all directions hum the scene of the commotion, and cattle running athighted from the wood in which they had sought shelter t ,04dt t' ' front the hodinlity heat, Thentaawbritkeabitindh es, and green leaves from' the tree tops, and with ered ones'flotti thaground, tinardost from the - dry earth, lifted together into the air iii a vast column, and whirled rapidly round, and heard the crash of of falling trees,-and the snapping of the shivered trunks, as if the Prince of the Power of the- Air, having received permission, had fallen in great wrath upon theforrest tirdestroy if; ?*l3eforethe ad vancing whirlwind the trees bowed to the ground, and the next moment were, raised again' by the power of the gale, and drawn., : into the vortex, and twisted oil by the roots, and whirled with ,all their branches into the air, and tossed to the one side and , the other, upon the stellate of the surrounding wood. IL was but fora moment, a -brief -moment of astonishment- and terror, that I stood gazing on this spectacle. 1 turned and made for the house with my utmost speed, and, as I ran, I heard the roar of the whirlwind behind me, and was sensible of a sudden shade passing. °ter the heavens.— When I arrived at the house, and opened the door, I saw my father, who had been engaged in read ing„ just rising from his seat, and going towards the window, with the book in his hart I, to beard the cause of the tumult without. That bouk was the BlELE—and the recolleetion of that single circum stance forms a ground of consolation and hope, in in the recollection of his sudden and unlorWarn ekt death, which I would not be deprived of for worlds. Ile gave a single look, the book dropped from his haul, and bef.rre I had time lo inter a word, be calleJ out in his strong voice; " Ilon—run for your lives—leave the house r hirlwind rs upon u•." " As he Hoke, the sound of the gust was heard howling about the divelting„ and the timber,t crack ed and groaned in the mighty blast. My mother had liasnly gathered the chiliret, and was putting us belnre her to go out at the door, when all at once a tort tole crash was heard over our heads the wails shook, the windows were shivered in pieces, the floor heaved - unkler our feet, and the ceiling bursting cards to several places, showed us the root rais• ed and borne ofl by the wit.J. The wails and par•Cs Isis of the house were swaj eJ to aail Ito lske a curtair. lather oas a man of great bodily streliz!h, of the widdle height, bucbrawny and mut cilar beyont.' most men I hare known. 1V en / last E-aw him, he had put his siranz arms against the wall that threatened to overwhelm us, and was bracing himself against it to give us an opportunity to c*.c.ipts. 1 saw also my motaer, who had taken the two youngest children by the hand, her hair E4:eaming upwards in disorder, making for the door I found myself, 1 know nochow, without the house anti scarcely . was I there, when a rush vi air seem ed 'o drag the brew h from my lungs, and! was lif.ed nom ;he ground amidst the whirl of dust, and l.rtikea bra...tiles, and shingles arid board:, Loin the 11 iw high I was carried I know not, for I -aw or !y the cotrto-ion ar‘ , l:::,l me, but shorty al:ern-aids I kit mpcif eofiy depotiited among bonzlts and leaves. _ . .. • _ 4 7.:, 1511121 g- I must have swooned after I descended; for I recollect slowly recovering my consciousness, and fdi.loog my garments wet and heavy, and ;he rain beatit.g upon me May aniong the thick foliage of a maple t;lat hnd been overthrown by the wind wind. A man whose voice and mein were Lunt.- iar to me ; and whom, as my senses gradually re turned, I recognised for one of my neighbors, carne and took me oft and place) me beside him on the gTound. Around me the earth was strewed will splinieted branches of trees, rails and bawds : and tooling westward to the lid!, I beheld where fen- c , .!-; had oeen swept away, and stone walls scatter ed, and a wide pa:h been broken through the wood, along, which rna‘ses.of fresh earth appeared among the heaps of posira:e trees, and tall shivered trur.ks stood ove.looking the ui rooted fellows. At a little distance from me, was a heap cm bricks and rub of-h, and on my inquiring what it could he . I w as told it was the ruins of my father's house, Then fla-lied upon n:y mind the recollection of that mo ment of confusion, haste and affright, which pasted before I lett i: and in a transport of anxies, amount ing almost to agony, I ran to the spot, I fo - ind the neighbors already gathered about it, and busy in removing the rubbish, in order to ascertain if any of the Lumley were ,buried benra•h; and weeping all the uhtie, I assisted them as far as ir.y . it.rength wou:d allow, notwithstanding the coed tia,ured attempts that were made to prevent me Let me hasten over what followed. I said in the bet - tinning that I could relate my story wiliout any painful emotion, but I was mistaken, for when come to this part of it, lam always sick at heart They were found—crushed to death by the fall of the chimney and the beams of the building—my fa:her—my dear mother, and the two lovely Chil dren will in her arms. But where was sister—has she been so fortunes as to escape! Even :his hope • was turned from me, tot she was soon found where the whirlwind had ca Lzr, in the edge of the brook now swollenby rains, the water rip plevas against her cheek, white as snow, and bier dishevelled hsir Boating in the current. - There are no expressions that can deieribe the bitterness of my artsfi The bodies were carried to a neighboring house; I followed them. I remained with them all night, i refused to be comlcstr - d but with the feverish hope, which sometimes crossed my mind, that the dead werejo a 'state of insensi bility from which they would - awaken. I slept nor, I ate not, till they wereboried. i sirs led mad ly and with meanings of agony against those who came to pot them in the coffins. They were ear rigid to the grave the next day, amidst a greatton coarse of people from all the isurrocoding reentry ; who.fdled the house and gathered in a iolerne' and silent multitude aroundihidoor. The hymn given an on-that amnion by the minister; was one my mother taught me to • tepee! fond 'mutely; and when they sang the following stanza, the eyei of all were fumed en me by reason of my 'passionate sobbinr.:' 4' ~ ~ w _ c:.:^~'.. ~: Man's life is like thegrass, • Or like the Moraine Rower A sharp wind sweeps the field, It withers in an hour." was no: allowed` to see the bodies covered with earth, lest my health, might sutler from the excess oftny grief; but when at length they told me-they were buried, I suffered myself re be undressed, and led to my bed, from which l,did not rise for several days after. " The neighbor to whose house the bodies of my family were taken, a devout and just man, of the Baptist persuasion, allowed me to remain under the roof, anJ treated me with great kindness.. He was-appointed my guardian, and proved &faithful steward of the remains of my . father's property.= The terrible'catamitY with which I had been visit ed, had engendered,.a sadness that hung upon me like a continual cloud, but as l grew up, my mind was opened to receive the consolations of ele gos pel. I saw that the chastisement, though severe, was meant for good, and that the Lord, by remov ing all whom I loved, and separating me from the children of men, had enabled me to devote myself the more entirety to the work of rev - felling my fellow creatures to him. 1 came, therefore, to this region of the west, where the fields were white for the reaper, where the harvest was plenteous and the laborers few, and entered on my new calling. which bra not been. unblessed, with a cheerful and ;It 04,Z ; . , , i'—.;7 . 'fill, 3 , , ."3.'s encouraged fpiiit." Here the travelling praacher made an end of his gory, but I had no opportunity of remarking on cer tain of its eiremnstances which seemed to me a little extraordinary,.since jnst at that moment he found hinoell oPpoOe the door,of one of the breth ern, a thrill farmer, m here be said he was under an engsgement to stop. FACTi. AB3tT TEA.—in the ninth century certain Arabian doctors mentioned a fragrant and fascinat ing Chinese beverage, prepared from a plant called scf.ah. Ater the lapse of softie six hundred years —in 1663-olearius discovered thet : tea was do mesticated as a luxury among the higher ranks of society in Persia Now, all through the wastes of Central Asia, the Ca!mucks, the Baskiri, &e., lea is !creme. Bu: td.eir useof it is not drink, bet a , olid nourishment. Ii has no appearance of deli cately rolled leave's, but sticks and stalks of the plant are made into heavy stone-like cakes, of the color of tan-balls, and of the consistency of iron bol:s., This is mois:ened and baked with the water of the steppes, mixed with the blood of animals, and enriched wi h the fat of beef or mutton,: and it is then eaten with spoons like that soup. " It is poison," said an old woman to Dt John son. " Madame, it may be poison, but have been severity years dying of ii," said he, draining his sixth evening bowl. Li eight years the leaves of the tea plant are ful ly charged, with their peculiarities. In the ninth year they begin to lose them. Vet the plants are stripped sometimes to the eleventh and tvrelftli year—and hence the enilless varieties of tea Each year theie a e f'.nr hars-e,os, of which that in Feb ruary is the.ic.ist in roan i y arid ihe best in qnality. The April harvest is a kind of rotten, the• second cutting ofilie hest. That of lone yields mainly large leaves, and that ut Augu.4 is ut the inferior quirky. A careful bath completes the preparation for pickling, and then, with gloved hands, the Work is commenced. An in,ll4<•.ions 'workman may col- lect from ten to fifteen pounds in a day. But on the same day he most strew them on a healed platter, and on the same evening, wrap them in a cloth, and dip them fnr gnme moments in hot water After they have dripped during the night, they are spread !he next morning in hat iron pane, in which Cley are con.tanly stilted_ Thsy are laid n, on mars, ntiecl with the open hand, completely cooled arch large fans dunng the process, then skillfully packed to chests THE rr Saw MILL —The old practice inmak the boards, was to split the logs with wedges ; and inconvenient as the practice was, it was no easy thing to persuade the world that it could be done in any better way. Saws were aterwardsin= ed fir the purpose of prepay-mg , timber and and saw-pr..; were then invented for the action of I the two banded saw. This mode of sawing logs wis'eteatly in use in New England, where a aver power embl no; be easily be eteline3, in the early part of tire p tesera centiny— and p:Ltsibly there are p;iees. yet, where the are known and render use fitt service. Sin- mills trete first used ih Enrope, in the With eemury; but so lately as 1.5.65, an Enc fish Ambassador, having seen a saw mill in France thought it a novelty which deserved a particular de:crip:inn. It 1.1. alTlClling to see how thu avers ion to labor saving machinery has always agitated ; England. The first saw mill Was established by a Otrchman in 1663 ; but the puhiic outcry against the new tangled machine was so violent, that the proprietor was forced to decamp with more expet.l Idilon than ever did a Derehmin before. The evil was Anis tapt Out, of Ertlakt tar several years ; or rather generatinnai Ine in 1733, an tailucky timber merchant, hoping that afwr. sn Irina a time the pub ; tic would be leas watchful of its own interests, made a rash attempt to construe! another mill. The 'guardians of the pablic welre, however were on the alert, and a conserentious mob at once col leered and pulled the mill to pieces. Serb patriot ic spirit could volt always hot; and now thongli nowhere seen the fret distinctly staled, there is rea son to believe tbOt, saw inillsare used in * England, .ptopelled hash by wirer and cram power: Scuopt. Tratnes.—Aman of a woman who en. gages IM a specified Slam to let whetplippte abase them for dues months: ,Oue. who is expeezed to govern buy or filly children without -a emu jock, many of whom ere &a:my ungovernable at home. One who is expired to do what the parents kbow they =tact do; lo make iniabehavior behave, inde licacy decent; and to impart knowledge where there ic no tsrams to :-.6t - -eire +! I=l tS6rB ~Sr Aiw; .:s".'~?:. A. Scene AT, A Ba r r. Ftowr.-4' few yeeti . :4o l The. inhabitants of Seville. reed, with surprise, in.lbe advertiseMents or an approaching bull-ight, Ibii unusual notice: it When the third bull shall. bale attacked the picadoni and *sired three Irate'. af bantlatillas, a youeg peasant, by Wborn he hal htuai brought up, will appear in the chew". As wilt approace the bull, caress ft, Siff after rearefull bandarElse, one after snider, will lie down 'be tween his horna" The announcement ofso singu lar a feat attracted an immense crowd to the arapf theatre. The third bull appeared, an animal• with splendid horns, and very brave i he Vs* fifer horses, receiredthe tiandasillo, and became *- nos. Then, contrary to custom, all the toner= re tired from the ring, leaving the bull stamping about and shaking the bloody darts that hung from his neck. All at once a long whit cram beard. .The bull paused and listened. It was repeated. if. approached the barrier, and a young man leaped into the ting; calling the bull by his name, "Mos quito." The animal knew its master, came to car ess him, and was appeased. The peasant gars it his hand to lick, and with the other began to scratch it behind the ears, an operation which seemed Id afford the poor brute much pleasure. He then gent. ly removed the banderillas which annoyed the neck of` Mosquito, made it go down on its knees, and placed his head iidtween his hem's. The grateful bull seemed to listen with pleasure to a pastoral melody song by the master. The aderate lion of the multitude, hitherto suppressed by law prise, bcrst lorth with Andalusian *lance,: and shook the building. Hearing this pltrensied ap plause, which had accompanied all his sufferings, the bull, till then under a charm, appeared Id 'watts and return to reality. He suddenly rose bellowing and the peasant tried to escape ; but it was too tale. The animal, as though furious at being betrayed, tossed the young men into the air, received him _ _ again on his horns, gored him, trampled him, and crushed bum to pieces, in vile of the tostenns,: The [unction was suspended, and--a phenomenon in Spain—the horrified public quitted the circus in silence. Washy:Gros PRAYS.—In the winter of 1777, while Walituneton, with the American army, lay encamped at Valley Forge, a good old Friend, by the name of Pouts, had occasion to pass through the wood near head-quarters. Treading Lis way along the venerable grafi!, soddenly he heard the sound of a human .voice, which, as he advanced, increased an his ear, and at length became like the voice ut ane speaking very earnestly. , As he approached the spot with a mafiosi step, whom should he behold, in a dark natural bowel of ancient oaks, bot the commander-in-chits{ of the American armies on his knees in prayer. Nlcrioniess with surprise, Friend-Potts continued on the plate till the General, having ended his de vo•ion4, aroe, and, with a emanlepinea 01 augello sereni - y, retired to head quarters. Fitend Pons then wept home ; and on entering, his parlor called cm to his wife, " Sarah, myrfeti;! Sarah! all is well! all is well ! Geotge Washiriguan will -yet prevail!"' ,‘ What is the matter, Isaac I" replied she.... " Thee seems moved." . • "Well, it , lseem moved, it is nofitorts than 1 am. I have this day seen what I never expette& Thee knows that I always thought the 'said and the gospel inconseltent, and that no man easel* soldier and a Christian at the same lime; but GM. tVeshingion has this day convinced me of my mis take." He then related what be had seen, and panels* ed with this prophetic. remark : " U deosge Washington is not a matt cif God, I am greitlrdes. ceived ; anl still more shall t be deceived'il Go 4 does not through hint, work out great Ealvatioa bt America." . A POOR Carrrea.—Long time ago in New Eng land, dwelt it lady equally renowned kw piety, ens. dulity and courage. As she was' in the` babifef *- turning from meeting, unallini,fell;lome low's formed a project.for frihtning .her r and ishing themselves witha little pleasant auteseswent. One arrayed in black, crowned with k and armed with a pi•chtotk, placed himseif behita a tee and awaiti-d her cumin. Hie compatrao' ars were concealed near by to watch the mischief and participate in the fun. At last came the unsweet ing victim leisurely along, meditating no doubt, on the discourse to which she had been listening Oat sprang his satanic Majesty pro tem. and con fronted her. 1 , Why, who be you !" -Phe exclaimed ' I'm the decil said the rogue, in i honor coffee. e• Well," fait she in a pitying trate, not ikiabiting the gentleman's won), " you're a poor eriner,nisnd *era ter way. We call that true courage, or, pergaps:Jiiorit prciperly,. faith. With a coaseiermeeeid.olotienee she knee she had nothing :o fear, that eke sea • a mate for bia • betters: ' 0•• Temperance OtWs wool co the fi:e, areal io the tub, flour is the barrel, stir.ia the body, and in:ellence in the brain ; h diffuses happiness era procperil - , cores health to eu}•y the plenty' whiitt Portman:ls oc , and a gra!ead. heart. toward the Clad el all blmings. , " Ma, said Jude Wilbelmina, I don't ibinh>s. mon seas so rich as they toy he eras." . • "Why,,ynydear,7 sairl her astopis:et! 'wisher Ite:catwet he !Up T L his fathent,....and Min* if he had been 'so rich he 'could have had a bed of his own." . Aast - snrnta..—To make your are , firs for you, and atenranis be angry because they tell lies-for dtemtehres. . Ta me tot a candtdale al an eteeinn, bsfaure be ehn , o* hand!. nut "rice, sad at i fn i.,jr,b e t.atsv. MU ME MC= .._,~~ :..,;,. ME =V FMB X l 4 ll O/Ma =I Mill